Tone height-adjustable tables and benches bring user adjustability and ergonomics to the variety of activities–from individual focused work to collaborative meetings–that occur in today’s dynamic workplace. With this intelligent system, clients can quickly and easily add fluidity to the way their spaces function.









With its slim profile and clean design, the Tone height-adjustable table integrates effortlessly into any environment. Customisable options for legs, worktops, screens, switches, and built-in cable management support seamless functionality.
Available in multiple configurations, Tone suits teams of varying sizes, forming clusters of up to eight connected columns. Designers can mix fixed and height-adjustable desks within a single layout to meet specific client needs.
Tone is intuitive, flexible, and user-friendly, adapting to changing work styles throughout the day. Its plug-and-play components ensure fast installation, easy reconfiguration, and the ability to add returns at any time.
MDF is used for worktops with a profile edge or visible cut out details, with edges sanded, stained, and waxed. Chipboard cores are chosen for square edge surfaces without cut outs, with colour matched edge bands on the worktop. Tone's base is built with roll formed steel, including optional outfitting with sit to stand capability.
Tops are available in a range of melamines and laminates. The table structure offers smooth paint in white or carbon colourways as standard. Other standard Knoll finishes for the tops and structure are available upon request. Screen panels are available in an array of colours across a choice of twelve fabric ranges.
Learn more at Ecomedes.
1175mm - 1775mm (w), 800mm (d), 648mm - 1298mm (h)
Contact us for full statement of line and configuration options.
Antenna Design was founded in 1997 by Masamichi Udagawa, a Cranbrook Academy graduate, and Sigi Moeslinger, who holds degrees from NYU and Art Center College of Design. Antenna's people-centred design approach aims to make the experience of objects and environments more meaningful and exciting. Among Antenna’s best known projects are the design of New York City Subway cars and ticket vending machines, JetBlue check-in kiosks and displays for Bloomberg.
When Knoll set out to create a new open plan office system, Antenna’s experience with the ever-expanding presence of technology, and their expertise in user experience made them an attractive collaborative partner. Together Knoll and Antenna conceived Antenna Workspaces, an innovative open plan system, which reflects Udagawa and Moeslinger’s interest in functional simplicity and their expertise in using design as a tool of social interaction that bridges people and technology.
Antenna has been recognised with several prestigious design awards, including the National Design Award in Product Design from the Cooper-Hewitt National Design Museum. Both Udagawa and Moeslinger are senior critics in graphic design at the Yale University School of Art.